Norway Faces New Economic Reality as Oil Falls
Oct. 30 (Bloomberg) -- In today's "Morning Must Read," Bloomberg’s Brendan Greeley recaps the op-ed pieces and analyst notes providing insight behind today's headlines on "Bloomberg Surveillance.”
Futures fell on reports of Iran explosions: The market power trend is about to end. Netflix gave weak guidance.
The S&P 500 could bottom out in the next month, according to Fundstrat's head of research Tom Lee.
Trump Media is advising investors on ways to prevent their shares from being loaned for a short-interest position.
Netflix reported first quarter earnings after the bell on Thursday. Here's what to know.
The insurer was accused by a short-seller of "extensive" fraud.
Wall Street's most-prominent stock-split stock of 2024 has been purchased on three separate occasions by a lawmaker who completed over 4,200 trades last year.
In the chaos of the 2008 recession, perhaps no bank stood more prepared than Jamie Dimon's J.P Morgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM). In advance of the crisis, Jamie Dimon realized that "underwriting standards were deteriorating across the industry," with late payments on subprime loans rising. In late 2006, the bank led his firm to exit Wall Street's hot subprime business, starting with a frantic call made to J.P. Morgan's vacationing Chief of Securitized Products where he said, "I really want you to w
An FAQ on the Truth Social owner’s website gave stockholders multiple ways to avoid their shares being lent to short sellers.
The most active U.S. West Texas Intermediate contract climbed $2.56, or 3.1%, to $84.66 per barrel. U.S. news outlet ABC News cited a U.S. official as saying that Israeli missiles had hit a site in Iran. Iran's Fars news agency said explosions were heard at an airport in the Iranian city of Isafahan but the cause was not immediately known.
Pfizer stock remains under pressure despite becoming one of the biggest names of the pandemic. Is PFE stock a sell?